четверг, 15 марта 2012 г.

Car being hawked as a character in 'The Middle'

NEW YORK (AP) — Frankie Heck settled into the driver's seat of a new Volkswagen on a recent episode of ABC's "The Middle," caressing the steering wheel as celestial music played. Her face was a mask of such pure pleasure that you almost wanted to avert your eyes.

The gleaming Passat appeared throughout the half hour. Dad Mike found it a comfortable refuge for a nap, daughter Sue studied for driver's ed and the whole family used it as a restaurant by driving around with a bucket of chicken.

Welcome to the world of product "integration" on prime-time television. Advertising within programs has gone beyond the mere placement of soda bottles on the table in front of "American …

Castle, Lee (originally, Castaido, Aniello)

Castle, Lee (originally, Castaido, Aniello)

jazz trumpeter, leader; b. N.Y., Feb. 28, 1915; d. Hollywood, Fla., Nov. 16, 1990. His brother Charles is a trombonist. He played in junior bands on drums, began on trumpet at 15, and became professional at 18. He worked in the mid-1930s with Joe Haymes, Dick Stabile, and Artie Shaw, before joining Red Norvo in July 1937. He joined Tommy Dorsey in September 1937, leaving the band when Tommy sent him to study with the Dorseys' father in Lansford, Pa., and returned in late 1938. He played briefly with Glenn Miller, then with Jack Teagarden from April-December 1939. He led his own band in 1940, was briefly with Will Bradley, then joined …

Chambers back reforms to save urban cores

REGION

Third-class cities initiative backs pension, arbitration and economic reforms

Revenues are shrinking, costs are skyrocketing, and Pennsylvania's third-class cities are struggling to keep the books balanced.

Meanwhile, state laws limit their options.

If the problems aren't fixed, companies could be slow to move to Central Pennsylvania and businesses across the region would have trouble attracting talented job prospects, according to state chambers of commerce, including three in the midstate.

The Harrisburg, Lancaster and York chambers and others have signed onto the Third-Class Cities White Paper that asks the state to make changes to the …

среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

DNA tests reveal mystery surrounding playwright Schiller

Who is buried in Friedrich Schiller's tomb? Several people, apparently, but none of them the famous poet and playwright, according to new research.

After two years of painstaking DNA research, experts have determined that none of the remains billed as those of Schiller belong to the German writer, who died in Weimar in 1805, Germany's MDR television reported. The study, dubbed the Friedrich-Schiller Code, was undertaken by the television station, the Foundation of Weimar Classics and an international team of scientists.

"Two years ago I was certain that we would prove that it was him; now we have proved the opposite," said foundation president Hellmut …

A look at developments in the auto industry

A look at developments in the auto industry Friday:

___

_General Motors Corp. said it plans to reopen a shuttered U.S. factory to build subcompact cars that will be the smallest vehicles the automaker has ever produced in the U.S. The move comes as GM prepares to announce the fate of the poster child for gas guzzlers, the Hummer brand. The retooled factory will be able to build 160,000 cars per year, GM said. It would create 1,200 jobs, offsetting some of the 21,000 that will be lost when GM closes the 14 factories by the end of next year.

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_The United Auto Workers ratified a package of concessions designed to reduce GM's labor …

Untamed Hearts Tangle In Entertaining `Shrew'

Among the more delicious scenes in Shakespeare Repertory's lavishproduction of "The Taming of the Shrew," which opened Wednesday atthe Ruth Page Theatre, is one that might be dubbed "the great waggingof tongues."

In it, the wild-eyed "Katherine the cursed" and her cocksuresuitor, Petruchio, first meet. And after raging like bulls, sparringlike champions and trading looks that burn more deeply than lasers,it is announced, to the amazement of all - but most especially to thebride-to-be - that they are to marry.

Of course this is a production by director Barbara Gaines, sowithin that ferocious, broadly comic battle of the sexes there aremoments that pop out and …

Larry Hagman set to visit 'Desperate Housewives'

NEW YORK (AP) — Larry Hagman will be paying a visit to Wisteria Lane when the former "Dallas" star appears in a guest role on "Desperate Housewives."

ABC says Hagman will play a love interest of Stella Wingfield, who is played by Polly Bergen on that network's prime-time soap opera. Stella is the mother of the character played by series star …

Allen helps undermanned Celtics top Raptors 103-96

Ray Allen scored 23 points, Rasheed Wallace added 16 and the Boston Celtics beat the Toronto Raptors 103-96 on Saturday night despite missing three starters because of injuries.

The victory snapped a three-game losing streak for Boston and ended the Raptors' season-high five-game winning streak.

Paul Pierce missed his fifth straight game after having a pair of minor surgical procedures for an infection in his right knee, Kevin Garnett was sidelined for his second consecutive game because of a sore right knee, and Rajon Rondo was out with a sore left hamstring.

Tony Allen added 14 points, seven assists and five rebounds for Boston. Glen Davis had 15 …

Some residents in Sydney still must boil water

SYDNEY, Australia Many of Sydney's 3.7 million residents mustboil their drinking water for another week before dangerous parasitesare flushed out of the water system, health officials said Saturday.

The outbreak of the parasites giardia and cryptosporidium, foundthroughout the system Wednesday and Thursday, has been a majorembarrassment for the city that will host the Summer Olympics in twoyears.

Bottled water has become a hot commodity, but despite the highdemand, there have been no reports of price gouging by …

4 Yankees, 3 Brewers picked as All-Star starters

NEW YORK (AP) — The starting lineups for the All-Star game will include four New York Yankees and three Milwaukee Brewers.

Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez, Robinson Cano and Curtis Granderson of the Yankees were elected by fans in the American League. Ryan Braun, Prince Fielder and Rickie Weeks were chosen from Milwaukee in the NL.

Results were released Sunday. The game is July 12 in …

Governor aims to meet with NYC mosque developers

Gov. David Paterson said he will soon meet with developers of a proposed Islamic center and mosque near the former World Trade Center, a spokesman said Tuesday.

Paterson's office declined to say what the meeting would be about, but Republican Rep. Peter King told The Associated Press that the governor wants to discuss possible alternate locations for the Park51 Islamic cultural center and mosque. King said he spoke with the governor Tuesday.

Representatives of the project said no meeting had been scheduled.

Paterson last week offered his help and the possibility that state land could be provided as an alternate site for the center. The project has …

today's people

Fisher returns to

drug rehabilitation

LOS ANGELES - Carrie Fisher has become addicted to prescriptiondrugs and has voluntarily checked into a detoxification program, herspokeswoman said.Fisher, who is perhaps best known for her role as Princess Leia inthe "Star Wars" trilogy, realized she had a problem shortly afterundergoing dental surgery, publicist Carol Stone said Monday."The combination of the prescribed medication required for manicdepression and the pain medication prescribed to her recently fromgetting dental implants caused her to recognize the problem earlyon," Stone said.Manic depression, also known as bipolar disorder, is a mentalillness marked by wide mood swings.Fisher has been in drug rehabilitation before. Her 1985 stayinspired her best-selling novel "Postcards from the Edge," which wasadapted into a hit movie.'Dr. Laura' can'tcover nude photosLOS ANGELES - Dr. Laura Schlessinger may need some therapyherself.A judge has refused to stop an Internet site from posting nudephotographs of the syndicated radio therapist and author.The photos, taken decades ago, have been plastered on the InternetEntertainment Group's Web site since last week.Since the pictures have been viewed on the site 14,000 times andit would be impossible to order a recall, U.S. District Judge DeanPregerson lifted a temporary injunction Monday.Schlessinger, 51, is known to radio listeners as "Dr. Laura" anddispenses advice on morality and family relationships.Singer-songwriterLee hospitalizedLOS ANGELES - Peggy Lee, the smoky-voiced singer-composer famousfor such songs as "Is That All There Is?" and "Fever," has beenhospitalized after suffering a stroke.Nicki Lee Foster said her 78-year-old mother had the stroke Oct.27."She's conscious and her family has been with her," she saidMonday, refusing to say where her mother was hospitalized.Doctors are trying to determine whether the stroke causedpermanent damage.

Russia's Rosneft posts 64 pct drop in 4Q profit

State-controlled Russian oil giant Rosneft said Wednesday its net profit fell 64 percent to $775 million in the fourth quarter compared to a year earlier as oil prices tumbled and export duties skyrocketed.

The fourth quarter net profit figure was down from $2.2 billion a year earlier, the company said in a statement. However, Rosneft's full-year net almost doubled in 2008, to $11.1 billion.

Revenues of Russia's largest oil producer slumped 34.5 percent in the fourth quarter, to $10.8 billion, but revenues rose 40.2 percent to $69 billion.

The company's president Sergei Bogdanchikov described the results as the company's best "in terms of operations and finances."

Just like other Russian oil producers, Rosneft suffered from a sharp drop in oil prices last fall and an increase in the export duty in the fourth quarter, which left oil producers with almost no profits.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

York loan broker lures bank rejects

When banks stamp "no" on a business loan request, York native Todd Biltz is ready to say "yes."

Two years ago, Biltz founded Rapid Funding Inc., Springettsbury Township, a loan broker that turns up cash for companies and entrepreneurs turned down by batiks. The average loan is about $300,000.

Rapid Funding's source of capital is a network of investors willing to lend money to restaurants, gas stations and other relatively risky businesses. The company also lends to entrepreneurs with credit histories tarnished enough to deter banks but bright enough for Rapid Funding's investors.

Is the risk higher? "That would depend on who's looking," says Biltz, his smile revealing a salesperson's knowing optimism. "I guess that's in the eye of the beholder."

He describes Rapid Funding's loans as unconventional, or "nonconforming" to bank guidelines. They are typically more expensive than bank loans. The higher cost, Biltz says, is the price of Rapid Funding's skill in finding money.

Rapid Funding charges a fee of between 1 percent and 3 percent of a deal's value. The higher the value, the lower the fee. Interest is usually three to six percentage points above the prime rate, the interest rate that banks charge to their best customers, currently around 7 percent a year.

Commercial loan brokers are unregulated, says Mike Wishnow, a spokesman for the state Department of Banking. The loans are private contracts between two businesses, both of which are expected to protect their own interests.

Still, cheaper loans are, available, argues James Gibson, CEO of Pennsylvania Commerce Bancorp Inc., East Permsboro Township, and a potential competitor. Government lending programs, such as the U.S. Small Business Administration's, should satisfy borrowers who exceed a bank's appetite for risk.

'More flexible'

In Rapid Funding's offices in a strip mall off Interstate 83, empty cubicles await the company's anticipated growth.

Rapid Funding is two companies, a wholesale operation and a retail branch known as Rapid Funding-York. The latter makes loans throughout Central Pennsylvania and expects revenue of $250,000 this year. Loan volume hit $5 million in the third quarter of 2000.

Rapid Funding's wholesale arm processes loans for other brokers and hopes to spark a national expansion of the retail side through a version of franchising. The wholesale operation should have sales of more than $1 million this year, Biltz estimates.

The wholesale company is selling "net branches" to other brokers. The cost of starting a net branch is $5,995. The price covers training, support and marketing help.

The package, Biltz says, should appeal to residential mortgage brokers who are tired of their boom-or-bust business. Mortgage brokers do well when interest rates fall, but suffer as rates rise.

Agents Mortgage Co., a residential mortgage broker in Lebanon, has made commercial loans for nine years, says Barbara Mark, the company's manager. But the loans represent less than 5 percent of the company's portfolio.

Mark wants to expand that business, and Rapid Funding's branch notion intrigues her. But she's noncommittal. "With customers that we've served, they could get financing from a bank:' she says. "I would like to think our guidelines are a little more flexible."

Va. Standoff Apparently Began As Hoax

HAMPTON, Va. - A supposed hostage standoff at a McDonald's restaurant Monday began with a hoax about a gunman and escalated when employees and customers retreated into a freezer after seeing a large police presence outside, authorities said.

A gunman was nowhere to be found, and the 12 employees and two customers appeared to be fine, Hampton police spokeswoman Cpl. Allison Good said.

Police responded to a cell phone call at 1:54 p.m. by a caller who claimed to have a gun inside the restaurant. Police officers quickly headed to the scene.

Managers saw police swarming outside and apparently ordered the employees and customers into the freezer, which locks from the inside, Good said. The first officers on the scene saw a man standing at the restaurant doorway, and he quickly bolted into the restaurant and disappeared from sight.

A SWAT team surrounded the building, and hostage negotiators tried but failed to contact the man, Good said.

Police also set up a command post near the restaurant, blocked traffic within a half-mile radius and asked people in nearby buildings to remain indoors.

About 4:40 p.m, a SWAT team freed the people from inside the freezer using a key that opened it from the outside, police said. And less than an hour later, officers searched the restaurant and announced there was no gunman.

Blues' Millen a joker, but he's serious on ice

ST. LOUIS Mike Keenan was in for a rude awakening the first timehe ran into Greg Millen. In fact, he was in for several rudeawakenings.

It was 1979 in Toronto. Keenan, a much-traveled minor leaguedefenseman, and Millen, a goaltender just out of junior hockey, wereroommates while trying out for the Canadian Olympic team.

"He was a little pistol," Keenan remembered. "I was the oldestmember of the team at 29. He was always pulling practical jokes onme, calling me `Gramps,' getting up in the middle of the night andthrowing water on me.

"But I fixed him in the end. We dressed a statue in his clothesoutside the building and we wouldn't let him back in the room."

Millen chuckled at the memory of being locked out in hisskivvies.

"Mike's got a better memory for that stuff than I do," Millensaid. "But I do remember him getting back at me. If you give it out,you've got to be able to take it as well, I suppose."

Times have changed. Millen, formerly of Pittsburgh and Hartford,now is the veteran goaltender of the St. Louis Blues. Keenan coachesthe Black Hawks. It will be more serious tonight at the Arena (7:35,SportsChannel, 780-AM) when Millen and the Blues try to get back intothe Norris Divison semifinal after dropping the opener Tuesday night.

But it won't be totally serious.

Millen is still the type to toss cold water on an unawareteammate or find new uses for shaving cream.

"I really enjoy the game," Millen said. "I enjoy the players init. If you don't do that, you certainly shouldn't be playing.

"Sometimes the business angle in professional sports takes awayfrom that a little bit and you have to replace it at times and havesome fun. I think it relieves some pressure, but as well, I thinkit's very important to enjoy the game. If you don't enjoy it, it'snot worth playing. If I'm enjoying the game, I'm playing better thanif I'm not."

In Game 1, Millen made 31 saves and some were spectacular. Butthe Hawks' 3-1 victory wiped out the Blues' home-ice advantage forthe series. Some games are more enjoyable than others.

"You always want to win," he said. "You're not here to lose.When you lose you have to evaluate your play and the team's play andtry to make adjustments to win.

"But you do your best, you work as hard as you possibly can everyday, and hopefully the chips will fall on the winning side. Butthey're not always going to. That doesn't mean you can't wake up thenext morning and be very thankful for what you have - your childrenand our family and the guys in the room. You realize today's anotherday and you look forward to playing the next game."

Millen was 6-1-1 against the Hawks in the regular season, and hisloss in Game 1 broke a 10-0-2 streak against the Hawks in the Arena.The Hawks say they want to go to the net to collect the reboundsbouncing off Millen's lightweight foam leg pads.

"They are lively at first, early in the year," Millen said. "Butat this time of the year, when the foam has broken down, I don'tthink there's any difference."

Millen thought the Hawks made a bigger difference by the way theyforechecked, and by the way they now take away the neutral zone froman attacking team.

"Mike has always been (a coach) that's locked the middle," Millensaid. "That's what he calls it. That's the new school terminology.Locking the middle is covering the wings and bringing your defensemenin to lock the center ice area.

"It takes a long time for a team that's been very flamboyant andoffensive to be committed to a more defensive checking style of play,and it's taken them a long time. But it seems to me now they'rebeginning to realize what the best approach is and adapt to it. Theylocked the middle extremely well against us. We have to realize andmake adjustments. It's like a chess game."

Millen made his own adjustment with the leg pads, which are madeof foam instead of the traditional deer hair. Each pad weighs aboutthree pounds, while traditional pads weight eight or nine poundseach. Millen began using them in 1987-88, and has had back-to-backwinning seasons, his first since he was a rookie.

"They've been a tremendous asset to me," he said. "You can'treplace taking some weight off your legs, especially when you're 31.I'll take that any day."

But despite his light approach to the game, Millen has noillusions that he can perform goaltending stunts he couldn't dobefore.

"Oh, no, I'm not a head case," he laughed. "I'm certainly not oneof those guys."

Summary Box: Copper prices fall to 8-month low

COPPER FALLS: The price of copper fell for a sixth straight day on Monday. The industrial metal hit its lowest price in eight months.

UNCERTAIN OUTLOOK: Copper has been hammered because demand for the metal is highly reliant on industrial growth. Mounting debt problems in Europe and a decline in imports by China have investors uncertain about future demand.

GOLD A WINNER: Gold again was the big winner among commodities. Its value as a safe alternative to currencies was evident after the euro hit a fresh four-year low.

Study looks at joint logistics

Military logisticians and commanders often must sort through a barrage of reports from deployed units at diverse locations to determine the mix of resources they need to sustain complex military operations. The job is hard enough at the major command or individual Service level, but when joint forces are involved in large-scale operations, it becomes a rigorous mental exercise that poses challenges for even the best and brightest logisticians and tacticians.

The U.S. Army Developmental Test Command (DTC), the developmental tester for the Army Test and Evaluation Command, is seeking to make the job easier by sponsoring a joint feasibility study for improving joint logistics planning processes. Called Joint Logistics Planning Enhancements (JLOG/PE), the study began in August 2001 and is scheduled to conclude in September 2002. It will result in a report to DOD's Deputy Director for Developmental Test and Evaluation. If given the green light by the deputy director, the JLOG/PE concept will be chartered as a 3- to 4-year joint test and evaluation program.

Elizabeth Murter, the Technical Director for the feasibility study, says that the study team will look at joint-level requirements to fight the battle or sustain troops in the field (what is needed, where it is needed, who has it, and how to get it). She describes JLOG/PE as not so much a set of information technologies, but business process enhancements that will improve the use of existing logistics systems and help joint-Service level logisticians and commanders get the best use of current, accurate information.

Murter adds that although new logistics information technology systems are being fielded, until now, there has been no comprehensive look at the logistics planning processes used by joint-force commanders. The team will look at reporting frequency, the accuracy and completeness of report information, and the actual fidelity of the information. This applies to all classes of supply, although JLOG/PE is initially focusing on munitions and fuel.

LTC Chris Jubok heads the feasibility study team, which includes DTC staff in addition to employees of Computer Sciences Corp. and SRS Technologies, two California-based companies that provide information technology services for government and private industry. Team participation from all military Services and Service commanders-in-chief will be sought if the program goes into testing.

Rat Poison Found in Tainted Pet Food

ALBANY, N.Y. - Rat poison was found in pet food blamed for the deaths of at least 16 cats and dogs, but scientists said Friday they still don't know how it got there and predicted more animal deaths would be linked to it.

After the announcement, the company that produced the food expanded its recall to include all 95 brands of the "cuts and gravy" style food, regardless of when they were produced. The company also said it would take responsibility for pet medical expenses incurred as a result of the food.

The substance in the food was identified as aminopterin, a cancer drug that once was used to induce abortions in the United States and is still used to kill rats in some other countries, state Agriculture Commissioner Patrick Hooker said.

The federal government prohibits using aminopterin for killing rodents in the U.S. State officials would not speculate on how the poison got into the pet food, but said no criminal investigations had been launched.

The pet deaths led to a recall of 60 million cans and pouches of dog and cat food produced by Menu Foods and sold throughout North America under 95 brand names. Some pets that ate the recalled brands suffered kidney failure, and the company has confirmed the deaths of 15 cats and one dog.

However, pet owners and veterinarians said the tally could actually be higher, and other deaths were reported anecdotally around the country. A Yorkshire terrier named Pebbles, whose picture became linked with the pet food scare, died Thursday of kidney failure, her owner said. The dog had eaten some of the food, and the owner, Jeff Kerner, said he was contacting an attorney because he wanted to prevent another pet tragedy.

"Before they put this stuff in the bags, there should be some kind of test," said Kerner, of Sherman Oaks, Calif. "I can't just let it go. Even if they just change the law."

The company expanded the recall - which initially covered only cans and pouches of food packaged from Dec. 3 through March 6 - after the FDA alerted it that some products remained on store shelves.

There is no risk to pet owners from handling the food, officials said.

The Food and Drug Administration has said the investigation into the pet deaths was focused on wheat gluten in the food. The gluten itself would not cause kidney failure, but it could have been contaminated, the FDA said.

Paul Henderson, chief executive of Ontario, Canada-based Menu Foods, confirmed Friday that the wheat gluten was purchased from China.

Bob Rosenberg, senior vice president of government affairs for the National Pest Management Association, said it would be unusual for the wheat to be tainted.

"It would make no sense to spray a crop itself with rodenticide," Rosenberg said, adding that grain shippers typically put bait stations around the perimeter of their storage facilities.

Scientists at the New York State Animal Health Diagnostic Center at Cornell University and at the New York State Food Laboratory tested three cat food samples provided by the manufacturer and found aminopterin in two of them. The two labs are part of a network created after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks to keep the nation's animals and food supply safe.

"Any amount of this product is too much in food," Hooker said.

Aminopterin is highly toxic in high doses. It inhibits the growth of malignant cells and suppresses the immune system. In dogs and cats, the amount of aminopterin found - 40 parts per million - can cause kidney failure, according to Bruce Akey, director of Cornell's diagnostic center.

"It's there in substantial amounts," Akey said.

Donald Smith, dean of Cornell's veterinary school, said he expected the number of pet deaths to increase. "Based on what we've heard the last couple days, 16 is a low number," Smith said.

Aminopterin is no longer marketed as a cancer drug, but is still used in research, said Andre Rosowsky, a chemist with the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Rosowsky speculated that the substance would not show up in pet food "unless somebody put it there."

Henderson said Menu Foods does not believe the food was tampered with because the recalled food came from two different plants, one in Kansas, one in New Jersey. Menu continues to produce food at the two plants.

The company, already facing lawsuits, said Friday it is testing all the ingredients that go into the food.

"We have a lot of work to do, and we are eager to get back to it," Henderson said. "This is a highly unusual substance."

When asked whether there would compensation for medical bills for sick pets, Henderson said "to the extent that we identify that the cause of any expenses incurred are related to the food, Menu will take responsibility for that."

A complete list of the recalled products along with product codes, descriptions and production dates was posted online by Menu Foods and is available at http://tinyurl.com/2pn6mm. The company also designated two phone numbers that pet owners could call for information: (866) 463-6738 and (866) 895-2708.

---

Associated Press writers Andrew Bridges in Washington, Michael Virtanen in Albany and Solvej Schou in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

---

On the Net:

FDA pet food recall information: http://www.fda.gov/oc/opacom/hottopics/petfood.html

Menu Foods: http://tinyurl.com/2pn6mm

(This version corrects the confirmed death toll of animals to 16, but notes that other deaths have been reported around the country. A previous version said the confirmed death toll was 17.)

Nitro city council discusses dioxin: School board official says members plan to meet with state on issue

FOR THE DAILY MAIL

Possible dioxin contamination in Nitro schools was the topic ofdiscussion during the city council meeting.

Charles Wilson, the assistant for facilities and operations forKanawha County Schools, addressed the issue of dioxin in Nitro HighSchool and Nitro Elementary at council's Tuesday meeting.

Wilson told the council the school system had done testing in bothschools and found the presence of dioxin. He said members of theschool board will meet with the West Virginia Department ofEnvironmental protection and the West Virginia Health Department onThursday.

"We will learn more about the scope of the problem then," saidWilson.

Wilson added the board will test all schools within a three-mileradius of the area where the dioxin seems to be concentrated.

"St. Albans and Cross Lanes could be tested as well," said Wilson.

When asked if test results could potentially set back the plannedstart date for classes in the area, Wilson replied that it was apossibility, but no decision would be made until the board hears fromthe DEP and the health department.

"The children's safety is our No. 1 concern," said Wilson.

Council learned the Nitro Community Center, located in a formerschool building, also has dioxin.

And council heard from attorney David Carriger, who isrepresenting some city residents in a potential class action suitagainst the parties responsible for the dioxin contamination.

"We've tested homes in the city and found very high levels ofdioxin," said Carriger, a lawyer for the Stuart Calwell law firm.

Carriger added that dioxin could have built up over decades andthat interpreting acceptable levels could be difficult because mostDEP and EPA standards are based on the contamination of ground soil.

He also said the cost of testing is very high and his firm wouldlike to shift that cost to those responsible.

"I don't want to cause a panic, but dioxin is very dangerous,"said Carriger, "The problem is city-wide."

According to Carriger the dioxin is a waste product of thechemical Agent Orange made in the area by the Monsanto Corporationfrom the 1930s through the 1970s.

Carriger added that testing can trace a particular dioxin back toits manufacturer.

"It is like a fingerprint - no two chemical make-ups are thesame."

Carriger said further testing is in the works and it will takemore time to determine the medical and environmental implications thedioxin has had on the city.

Mayor Rusty Casto and other council members said they plan toattend Thursday's meeting.

Kidnapped BBC Reporter Freed in Gaza

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - British reporter Alan Johnston, looking pale and tired, was released Wednesday after nearly four months in captivity in the Gaza Strip and said it was "fantastic" to be free after an "appalling" ordeal.

The British Broadcasting Corp. correspondent described his time in captivity as "occasionally quite terrifying" in a telephone interview with the BBC. "It was an appalling experience," he said, speaking from the home of deposed Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh in Gaza.

"It is indescribably good to be out," he said in a steady and composed voice. "It is just the most fantastic thing to be free," he added, saying he felt as well as could be expected.

"I didn't know where it was going to end," he said, adding that he had endured "an extraordinary level of stress" and psychological pressure. "I probably got out if it as well as I could have."

Johnston was kidnapped by a shadowy, little-known group from a Gaza City street on March 12 and held far longer than any other foreign reporter in Gaza.

After his release, he was taken to the home of Haniyeh in Gaza City's Shati refugee camp. Before entering, Johnston told an Associated Press reporter, "I'm OK, really, I'm OK."

Television footage showed Johnston emerging from a building in Gaza surrounded by a throng of armed Palestinian men and escorted into a waiting car while cameras flashed around him.

Simon Wilson, the BBC's Middle East bureau chief, speaking to BBC News 24 from Jerusalem, said he had spoken to Johnston following his release. "His first thoughts were for others and for what they've done for him."

The BBC also reported Johnston had spoken to his father since his release. A BBC spokesman in London could not confirm details of the terms of the reporter's release.

There was no immediate comment from Johnston's captors, the Army of Islam.

Hamas had demanded Johnston's freedom since it violently seized control of Gaza last month, in an apparent bid to curry favor with the West.

On Tuesday, Hamas gunmen took positions around the Army of Islam's stronghold, stepping up the pressure to secure his release.

Members of Hamas' 6,000-person militia moved onto rooftops of high-rise buildings and deployed gunmen in streets of the Gaza City neighborhood inhabited by the Doghmush clan, the large, heavily armed family that leads the Army of Islam.

In an afternoon exchange of fire, a Palestinian civilian was killed, Hamas said, blaming the Doghmush forces. No other casualties were reported.

"The clocks have begun ticking toward the release of Alan Johnston," said Hamas spokesman Ghazi Hamad. "The operation of the interior ministry Executive Forces has started, and they are tightening the siege on the people involved in his kidnap."

Interior Ministry spokesman Khaled Abu Hilal said Tuesday that security forces "will not spare any efforts to free the British journalist." Hamas radio broadcast a toll free phone number, urging people to call in any information about the case.

On Monday, Hamas arrested the spokesman of the Army of Islam, giving it a potentially valuable bargaining chip in its efforts to release Johnston.

Late Tuesday, the Doghmush clan released nine students loyal to Hamas that they kidnapped earlier in the week. Hamas officials and mediators said the release was meant to pave the way for Johnston's release.

Then four Army of Islam members were freed by Hamas, said Abu Mujahid from the Popular Resistance Committees, the militant group handling the negotiations. The four included the Army of Islam spokesman arrested Monday.

Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum accused Johnston's captors of smearing the Palestinian people's reputation and of seeking "to prove to the world that we are a group of militias that fight each other to gain personal ends."

The Army of Islam, whose formerly close relations with Hamas have soured, had demanded that Britain first release a radical Islamic cleric with ties to al-Qaida. It also had threatened to kill Johnston if Hamas tried to free him by force.

Last week, the Army of Islam posted a video message from Johnston on a militant Web site in which he appeared to be wearing an explosives belt that he said his captors would detonate if there were an attempt to free him.

The same group was involved in the capture of Israeli Cpl. Gilad Shalit, who was seized more than a year ago in a raid on an Israeli army post near Gaza.

понедельник, 12 марта 2012 г.

Strasbourg International Results

Results Tuesday from the Strasbourg International, a $220,000 WTA Tour clay-court event at Ligue de Tennis d'Alsace (seedings in parentheses):

Singles

First Round

Sybille Bammer (6), Austria, def. Pauline Parmentier, France, 2-6, 6-4, 7-5.

Dia Evtimova, Bulgaria, def. Tatjana Malek, Germany, 6-4, 7-5.

Julia Goerges, Germany, def. Maria Elena Camerin, Italy, 5-7, 7-5, 6-1.

Smoke forces emergency landing

ROCHESTER, Minn. A Northwest Airlines plane to Chicago made anemergency landing here Tuesday with smoke in the cockpit. No one wasinjured.

The DC-9 was carrying 91 people, including crew members, onFlight 24 from Minneapolis to Chicago when the plane made theemergency landing at 1:30 p.m.

Firefighters at the Rochester airport said the smoke was causedby an electrical fire.Northwest spokesman Barry Hoeppner said the airline would notconfirm the cause.

Powell summoned to lead digital-gap closure

Powell summoned to lead digital-gap closure

A campaign aimed at narrowing the digital divide in America is imminent as professionals and opinion leaders nationwide have reached out to Secretary of State Colin Powell to head the team.

Unperturbed by the enormous work load placed on Powell by the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, retired baseball player Reggie Jackson will soon discuss the idea with Powell.

Jackson, founder Mr. October Foundation for Kids, told the Chicago Defender that Powell fits the stature of leader needed to arouse the interest of the nation towards bridging the divide.

He earlier called for a collective effort by private sources and governments in bridging the information gap among minorities, stressing "penetration is in single digits" among minorities.

A Jackson aide said the ongoing baseball playoffs and Powell's role in coalition-building is delaying the campaign.

"Jackson is busy now because of the playoffs," the aide said, stressing "he will be available to talk more about the idea very soon."

Jackson was set to meet Powell shortly before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

A U.S. Census Bureau report recently released indicated that more than half of all U.S. households had a computer last year, but just 43 percent of African American children and 37 percent of Hispanic children had home computers, compared to 77 percent for whites and 72 percent Asian American homes.

Nine out of 10 school-age children had access to a computer last year, either at home or at school. Computer use at school was nearly equal across income and ethnic lines, the report said.

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) commissioned in Chicago a multi-purpose Family Technology Center (FTC) early in the year.

The center has 25 computers, four printers and two scanners. It was meant to serve as the training ground for South Side residents, according to Furmin Sessoms, the executive director of the South Side NAACP branch.

Article Copyright Sengstacke Enterprises, Inc.

Photo (Colin Powell)

Inspector Can Save Condo Buyers Cash

Condo buyers have their own set of special concerns wheninspecting a unit.

Many buyers of apartment and town-house condominiums are notaware of exactly what they are buying, experts say. Some might notbe buying the outside of their own unit, but a percentage of theentire building and a percentage of all the problems that go with it,according to Stephen A. James, of American Building InspectionService.

"They might look at a condo that looks good," James said. "It'sgot four walls and a toilet, the appliances seem to work. But if inthe next five years, you've got 10 grand worth of new roofing, and$40,000 in porch work, and a 30 grand tuckpointing job; there's goingto be some rude knocks for the new owner.

"An inspector will check to see if boilers and the heating plantare well maintained," he said. "The condition and life span issomething that eludes the average person. The lifespan of most ofthe boilers is about 15 to 30 years for steel and 30 to 50 for castiron."

"The roof is an area that should be checked," he said. "Makesure that the roof will not have to be changed soon. The lifespan is8 to 12 years on conventional built-up roof and greater than 10 to 15on some. On most pitched roofs, its 12 to 18 or more with some ofthese fiber glass shingles."

"Tuckpointing and rebuilding of parapet walls and chimneys isvery expensive," James said.

"When you are getting into these vintage buildings, theenvironmental concerns are more than if you are getting into, say, a3-year-old building on Southport," he said.

"You want to see what kind of insulation is on your pipes,"James added. "See if the main water line is a suspected lead color,a dull gray. You want radon testing. We always do a carbon monoxideinspection."

"You should look for sloping floors or out-of-level interiorstairwells. Does the electrical service have circuit breakers or isit the older fuse type?" he said. "There are a lot of things tolook for that the average person won't see."

The cost varies with the size and age of the building, he said.

Jeff Nathan's Amerispec Home Inspections does a lot of work intown-house condominiums in the northern half of Chicago and LakeCounty.

"In a town home, generally they have their own heating, airconditioning and electrical. We will check those systems," he said."A town home is almost like a house in that respect. We will checkto the roof. There are inspectors who won't, because it's a commonelement."

"Basically, our inspections take almost as long as a house,"Nathan said. "We're missing one or two exterior walls, but otherthan that we check everything we would in a house."

Even a savy buyer misses some important spots like the roof, heexplained.

"Frequently, there are problems with flashing on roof betweenunits," Nathan said. "In basements in many units, you want to seehow sump pumps are ejecting water out of the town home. Generally,the average person isn't going to inspect the electrical panel. Weput carbon monoxide meters on the heating units.

"We do a lot of inspections for general contractors. You wouldthink that they know the house," Nathan said. "But they are savvyenough to know that they want another point of view."

Town-house inspections cost from $200 to about $250, he said.

The inspection pros offer some other tips:

Electrical system. Look for exposed wiring. Check servicepanel for tripped circuit breakers, scorching or exposed splices.

Heating-cooling. Determine the age and condition of thefurnace, boiler or air-conditioning equipment. Check the thermostat. Check vents for hot and cold air flow. If hot-water or steamradiators are present, check around valves for signs of leakage.Make certain a hot shower and the dishwasher can be runsimultaneously.

Plumbing. Turn on three fixtures simultaneously to check foradequate pressure. Examine floor areas around tubs and showers.Check for corrosion on pipes, especially at the water heater.

IMF asks Greece to cut wages, sees debt deal soon

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greece and the IMF said Wednesday that negotiations for landmark debt deals will be concluded in a "matter of days," raising hopes that the country will dodge a disastrous default in the spring.

Greece is in talks with private creditors to have them take losses on their bondholdings and with its international bailout rescuers to receive new loans.

"In the coming days, the agreements must be completed," government spokesman Pantelis Kapsis said.

Debt inspectors from the European Commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, known as the troika, are in Athens for talks on a second €130 billion ($171 billion) bailout package.

That deal is tied to an agreement with private creditors to accept losses on Greek bonds, which will cut €100 billion off the country's national debt.

Chief IMF inspector Poul Thomsen also said a deal was close, but pressed the recession-plagued country to lower employment costs and even slash the minimum wage to make the economy more competitive.

"It's a matter of days," Thomsen was quoted as saying by the Athens daily Kathimerini. "The discussions for the (new) program will be concluded very soon."

Thomsen insisted wages in Greece remain too high and urged the government to consider cutting the minimum wage of €750 ($988) gross pay per month.

Greek unions and employers are to resume negotiations on Thursday in an effort to cut labor costs, but both sides are already in agreement that the minimum wage and basic private sector pay should not be affected, arguing such a move would only deepen the recession.

The EU statistics agency Eurostat on Tuesday revealed that unemployment in December in Greece rose to 19.2 percent, the second highest rate in the eurozone after Spain, which stood at 22.9 percent.

Greece and its creditors are anxious to close the new rescue deals ahead of a March 20 Greek bond repayment worth €14.5 billion ($19.1 billion) that the country cannot afford. A default would spell disaster for the country and destabilize European and global markets.

Formed in November, the coalition government is backed by the majority Socialist party, rival conservatives and the small right-wing LAOS party.

Kapsis said Prime Minister Lucas Papademos would summon the leaders of those parties to a meeting to agree on the new deals and required austerity measures.

LAOS leader George Karatzaferis sent a letter Wednesday to the top European Union officials, calling on the European parliament to take a position on Greece's debt agreements and describing the current debt inspection arrangements an "economic dictatorship."

In the letter, Karatzaferis wrote: "Reform cannot happen at gunpoint, especially when it requires the participation of the complex structure of an entire society."

___

Derek Gatopoulos in Athens contributed.

Texas opens inquiry into Google search rankings

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google Inc.'s methods for recommending websites are being reviewed by Texas' attorney general in an investigation spurred by complaints that the company has abused its power as the Internet's dominant search engine.

The antitrust inquiry disclosed by Google late Friday is just the latest sign of the intensifying scrutiny facing the company as it enters its corporate adolescence. Since its inception in a Silicon Valley garage 12 years ago, Google has gone from a quirky startup to one of the world's most influential businesses with annual revenue approaching $30 billion.

A spokesman for Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott confirmed the investigation, but declined further comment.

The review appears to be focused on whether Google is manipulating its search results to stifle competition.

The pecking order of those results can make or break websites because Google's search engine processes about two-thirds of the search requests in the U.S. and handles even more volume in some parts of the world.

That dominance means a website ranking high on the first page of Google's results will likely attract more traffic and generate more revenue, either from ads or merchandise sales.

On the flip side, being buried in the back pages of the results, or even at the bottom of the first page, can be financially devastating and, in extreme cases, has been blamed for ruining some Internet companies.

European regulators already have been investigating complaints alleging that Google has been favoring its own services in its results instead of rival websites.

Several lawsuits filed in the U.S. also have alleged Google's search formula is biased. Google believes Abbott is the first state attorney general to open an antitrust review into the issue.

"We look forward to answering (Abbott's) questions because we're confident that Google operates in the best interests of our users," Don Harrison, Google's deputy general counsel, wrote in a Friday blog post.

Harrison said that Abbott has asked Google for information about several companies, including: Foundem, an online shopping comparison site in Britain; SourceTool, which runs an e-commerce site catering to businesses; and MyTriggers, another shopping comparison site.

All of those companies offer features that Google includes in its search engine or in other parts of its website. Foundem, SourceTool and MyTriggers have previously filed lawsuits or regulatory complaints against Google.

"Given that not every website can be at the top of the results, or even appear on the first page of our results, it's unsurprising that some less relevant, lower quality websites will be unhappy with their ranking," Harrison wrote.

Google says its closely guarded search formula strives to recommend websites that are most likely to satisfy the needs of each user's request. If it didn't keep its users happy, Google argues that people would become disgruntled and switch to other search engines offered by Yahoo Inc., Microsoft Corp. and IAC/InterActiveCorp's Ask.com.

Regulators and lawmakers in the U.S. and Europe also have been looking into Google's privacy practices and its acquisitions as the company tries to fortify its power.

среда, 7 марта 2012 г.

Judaica for the holidays

Among the new holiday gift books on topics dealing with Judaismand the Jewish heritage:

The Encyclopedia of Judaism, edited by Geoffrey Wigoder(Macmillan, $75). More than 1,000 entries, written by more than 70rabbis and scholars on subjects ranging from Abraham and adultery tozionism and the zodiac, comprise this weighty but readable referencevolume. Said to be the first such one-volume English-languageencyclopedia in more than 20 years, it puts such subjects ashomosexuality in a contemporary light. More than 300 illustrationsare included, plus an index that grants easy access to the randomquestioner and a glossary of Jewish terms.

A Temple Treasury: The …

Greece slams IMF, EU debt inspectors

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — An indignant Greece slammed EU and International Monetary Fund inspectors overseeing its efforts to reform its debt-crippled economy, accusing them Saturday of overstepping their role and interfering in Greece's internal affairs.

In an unusually harshly worded pre-dawn statement, government spokesman Giorgos Petalotis called the behavior of the inspectors at a Friday news conference unacceptable.

"We have needs, but we also have limits. And we do not negotiate the limits of our dignity with anyone," Petalotis said. "We take orders only from the Greek people."

It was the first time the government has publicly struck back at the IMF and the European …

вторник, 6 марта 2012 г.

Backpacking icon Fletcher dies: Peninsula: Health deteriorated after accident in 2001.

Byline: Laith Agha and Dania Akkad

Jun. 14--Colin Fletcher, a backpacking guru who wrote the book on the art of a good walk, died Tuesday at Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. He was 85.

"He is sort of a cult icon in the backpacking world," said Annette McGivney, the Southwest field editor for Backpacker Magazine. "He was like the Jerry Garcia of backpacking."

Fletcher lived in Carmel Valley for many years. He was struck by a vehicle in 2001 while walking to a town hall meeting about the proposed incorporation of Carmel Valley, but survived major injuries. He lived in Flanders Court, an assisted living facility, for about three years before being admitted to the hospital earlier this week after a period of declining health, according to his bookkeeper, Chris Cassidy. …

Backpacking icon Fletcher dies: Peninsula: Health deteriorated after accident in 2001.

Byline: Laith Agha and Dania Akkad

Jun. 14--Colin Fletcher, a backpacking guru who wrote the book on the art of a good walk, died Tuesday at Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. He was 85.

"He is sort of a cult icon in the backpacking world," said Annette McGivney, the Southwest field editor for Backpacker Magazine. "He was like the Jerry Garcia of backpacking."

Fletcher lived in Carmel Valley for many years. He was struck by a vehicle in 2001 while walking to a town hall meeting about the proposed incorporation of Carmel Valley, but survived major injuries. He lived in Flanders Court, an assisted living facility, for about three years before being admitted to the hospital earlier this week after a period of declining health, according to his bookkeeper, Chris Cassidy. …

понедельник, 5 марта 2012 г.

WE'RE COOKING

FATHER'S DAY - it's the day when Dads all over this country will man the grill to cook up the ubiquitous hot dogs, hamburgers and steaks.

It's a day to honor Dads, now a widely accepted holiday.

If he insists, let Dad do his annual outdoor barbecue but mark the day with a breakfast/lunch featuring his favorite dishes. Along with the usual breakfast fare, slip in something you know he can't resist.

My husband adores stickers, Chinese lings that are fried then steamed. Maybe it's unorthodox breakfast dish, but I'm going to go ahead anyway.

Hell love it and the family will talk about it and may demand it for breakfast - for weeks afterwards.

Fve never …

Filling machine.(Supplier's Marketplace)

Filamatic offers its DAB-5 Semi-Automatic Benchtop filling machine. The Filamatic DAB-5 machine is fully customizable and has the ability to be transformed into an automatic packaging line from its current semi-automatic status, the company says. The DAB Series accommodates free flowing, semi-viscous, viscous, …

McCaffery knows Manhattan's plight; As an aide, Siena coach lost best player to grades.(Sports)

Byline: PETE IORIZZO Staff Writer {FACTBOX} Siena basketball - Who: Manhattan (12-6, 8-2 MAAC) vs. Siena (9-9, 4-6) When: 7 p.m. Where: Pepsi Arena, Albany Radio: WROW (590am)

LOUDONVILLE - Fran McCaffery may not offer any sympathy to Manhattan, which just lost its best player to an academic suspension. But he can relate.

In 1991, McCaffery served as an assistant coach on a Notre Dame team that seemed poised for a postseason run behind junior star Laphonso Ellis. That all changed when, halfway through the season, Ellis was suspended for academic reasons. Without Ellis, the Irish finished 12-20 and, at the end of the year, head coach Digger Phelps resigned. …

Ribbon cuttings and local happenings.(Advanced Audiology, Left Coast, Pacific Trim and Floor)

Megan Bennett, Audiologist (left), Dr Jayna Wiliams-Coluccio (w/scissors) and Gayle Jones second from right along with Chamber Ambassadors and friends cut the Ribbon to Advanced Audiology in Bellinghamn. Located at 902 N. State Street Ste: 102 Advanced offers Hearing aid sales, comprehensive audiological evaluations, and hearing testing for adults & pediatrics. For more information phone 360-734-1866. Check the web at www.advancedaudiologylic.com.

Left Coast Furnishings joins the Chamber after opening in January at 1322 cornwall Avenue, downtown Bellingham. Left Coast offers affordable custom modern …

Audit: Changes needed to make nuke plants secure

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A federal audit calls for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to improve nuclear power plant security against infiltration by potential terrorists.

The audit set to be released Monday recommends additional training in identifying suspected terrorists, greater access to criminal databases by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, stepped up "re-screening" of power plant employees and notifying plant operators …

10% of CBOE staff opts for severance package

About 10 percent of the staff of the Chicago Board OptionsExchange has signed up for a proposed severance package designed tocut costs, officials said Tuesday.

But not all of those 100 employees will get to give themselvesthe ax. Exchange officials said that the number of employees whoaccepted the severance package was slightly greater than expected.

"We don't plan to accept all that have been submitted," saidCBOE President Chuck Henry.

"We will be looking at the positions to determine how centralthey are to exchange operations and make judgments on that basis," hesaid.

Trading floor and office workers were offered one month's payfor each …

воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

German Conergy installs largest solar rooftop system in Canaries.

(ADPnews) - Apr 15, 2011 - German solar technology specialist Conergy AG (ETR:CGY) has completed the installation of the largest solar rooftop system on the Canary Islands.

The power plant is expected to produce 2,600 megawatt hours of electricity annually in the future, Conergy said.

The …

Burned Shaker home can be saved; Centuries-old dwelling won't be razed after fire damages 3 apartments.(Capital Region)

Byline: JORDAN CARLEO-EVANGELIST - Staff Writer

COLONIE - The Shakers built them to last.

An about 2,000-year-old dwelling house that was home to members of America's first Shaker community will not have to be torn down after being partially burned early Wednesday, officials said Thursday.

The 2(-story white brick building at 900 S. Family Drive was built in either 1800 or 1822 and was home to the South Family order of the Watervliet Shakers. Three of its seven apartments were damaged by the fire that broke out at about midnight Wednesday.

Michael Rosch, director of the town's Building Department, said the house is safe for the residents of …

CITY LOOKS AT BUILDING NEW PARKING DECK.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: KENNETH C. CROWE II Staff writer

A new parking deck for the city's west side is being considered by the Public Works Department as officials grapple with new downtown development removing parking while bringing more people to Broadway and its side streets.

Public Works Commissioner Thomas McTygue told the City Council recently that the so-called Hub lot on Woodlawn Avenue between Walton and Church streets may be the site for the city's second two-story parking deck. The first one is located at Phila and Putnam streets, just east of Broadway.

The newest deck is in the discussion stages. The lot at that location has space for about 100 …

Sexual assault prevention in colleges is focus of bill.

Byline: Angie Herrington

Jun. 12--University leaders said they are unsure how they will carry out a bill awaiting Gov. Phil Bredesen's signature that encourages colleges to offer instruction on preventing sexual assault. "This is a movement in the right direction, with the caveat if the resources are there to implement it," said Dan Reilly, director of the Safety, Environment and Education Center at the University of Tennessee.

Under the bill, the Tennessee Board of Regents and the University of Tennessee board of trustees are "strongly encouraged" to offer instruction that focuses on preventing hate crimes, sexual battery, sexual harassment and date rape to …

2 officers killed in Paraguay stadium collapse

Part of a stadium collapsed during an amateur football game in Paraguay's capital, killing two police officers and injuring seven others Sunday.

The Paraguayan Football Association said the Defensores del Chaco Stadium will be closed pending an investigation into the collapse and …

PROBCAST: A Web-Based Portal to Mesoscale Probabilistic Forecasts

An experimental Web site tests innovative approaches for displaying probabilistic weather predictions based on postprocessed high-resolution ensemble forecasts.

The transition from deterministic weather predict ion to an environment in which probabilistic forecasts are generated, communicated, and applied is one of the great challenges before the me- teorological community. Recently, both an official statement of the American Meteorological Society (AMS 2008) and the "Completing the Forecast" report of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS; National Research Council 2006) noted that widespread dis- semination of probabilistic weather predictions would yield substantial economic and …

NeoGenomics Appoints Dr. Barbara Chaitin as Director of Surgical Pathology and Medical Director for its Florida Lab.

NeoGenomics, Inc. (NASD OTC BB: NGNM), a leading provider of cancer-focused genetic testing services, announced the appointment of Dr. Barbara Chaitin as Director of Surgical Pathology for NeoGenomics Laboratories and Medical Director of the Fort Myers, Florida laboratory (see also NeoGenomics, Inc.).

Dr. Chaitin was recently the Director of Esoteric Services, and Chair of the Solid Tumor Committee, at AmeriPath, a division of Quest Diagnostics Inc. Prior to that time, she was National Medical Director and Head of Solid Tumor Services at Genzyme Genetics in New York City. Dr. Chaitin's professional experience also includes service as Associate Medical Director at IMPATH …

British (& Aussie) RMBS Invasion Anticipated.

A couple of British and Australian RMBS deals recently distinguished themselves in the issuance market, a sign for some in the asset securitization business that a wave of such products could be on the way.

"Given the noise recently, investors are looking to diversify out of the U.S. home equity stuff," one market participant in New York said. "As long as it is prime stuff, people are jumping to it."

As one London market participant noted, a lot of large mortgage lenders, in the U.K. especially, held off from issuing RMBS paper because they had not fully appreciated all the benefits of issuing asset-backed securities.

"Securitization was only being …

суббота, 3 марта 2012 г.

TROY MAN PEPPERED WITH SPRAY DURING ARREST ON DWI COUNT.(CAPITAL REGION)

A 23-year-old Troy man got a sharp taste of police tactics Sunday when he allegedly fought back during an arrest and had to be subdued with pepper spray.

Police said David P. Turner of 8 Northern Drive was stopped at about 3:30 a.m. at 111th Street and Fifth Avenue. Turner failed a field sobriety test and was being placed under arrest, police said, when he became agitated and began fighting with officers.

Turner, listed on police records at 6 feet 3 inches tall and weighing 200 pounds, was …

Developing countries want say in world finance

As leaders from the world's richest countries argue in London this week over how to tackle the global economic crisis, developing nations will be shouting even louder for a bigger say in any global solution.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's denunciation of the crisis as one "created by white people with blue eyes" is a blunt summation of developing countries' stance ahead of the Group of 20 summit Thursday.

Brazil, India, China, Indonesia and other emerging economies are seeking to become an increasingly powerful voice within the G-20, amid stark warnings from aid agencies that millions more people will fall into extreme poverty and …

Harold Washington Party has to wake up

Because Carol Moseley Braun won the Democratic Party's nominationfor the U.S. Senate, a basic plank in the platform of the HaroldWashington Party has been rendered sawdust.

That piece of political lumber implied that African Americanscould not have their political needs met by either major party. Theleaders of the parties were deaf to their concerns.

Then came Braun to prove them wrong. An African American canwork and win within the structure of a major political party. Herplan was deliciously simple. She reached out to and listened to theconcerns of all the people of Illinois instead of a narrow segment ofthe population.

She never once lashed out and …

Cycle lengths and phase portrait characteristics as probes for predator-prey interactions: comparing simulations and observed data.(Report)

Introduction

Predator-prey systems may show regular cyclic behavior over time. We here hypothesize that cycle lengths and quantitative phase portrait characteristics of a predator-prey system can be used to predict important characteristics of both prey and predator populations, such as cycle amplitude and the tightness of their coupling. Explaining the cyclicity of populations has been an area of interest in ecology ever since Elton (1924) first recorded the phenomenon. The cycles can be externally driven, or be caused by internal factors related to the interaction between the prey and the predator. In rodent-specialist predator interactions, it has been thoroughly demonstrated that the causes of at least some of the cycles are the interactions between the species, e.g., for voles in Fennoscandia (Hanski et al. 1991; Turchin et al. 2000) and in Hokkaido, Japan (Saitoh et al. 1998; Stenseth et al. 2003). Recently, cycles of voles and lemmings in Scandinavia have shown a tendency for dampening of their cycles (Hdrnfeldt 2004; Hdrnfeldt et al. 2005), and climate effects may be a possible explanation for this dampening.

The cyclic nature of predator-prey interactions are easily seen in simple mathematical models of prey-predation, such as the Lotka-Volterra model (Lotka 1925; Volterra 1926) and the Rosenzweig-MacArthur model (Rosenzweig and MacArthur 1963), as well as in more detailed models. We compare cycle characteristics extracted from the simulations of the Lotka-Volterra and Rosenzweig-MacArthur models with characteristic parameters of field data, here the fur return data from Canada, to evaluate the ability of the model to capture the relationship between parameters that expresses cyclic properties of the time series. In addition we run simulations of a specialist and generalist predator model (Hanski et al. 1991). This model adds more realism, compared with the other two models, and we expect that it may be better at predicting the dynamics of the mink-muskrat system. We examine three characteristics of the population cycles: the amplitude of the single-species cycles, the time lag between the cycle peaks of the interacting species, and the pattern of the trajectory of species pairs plotted in phase space. For a predator-prey pair, it has been shown that the trajectories rotate counter-clockwise when the phase space has the prey on the x axis and the predator on the y axis (Seip 1997).

The analyses of the American mink (Neovison vison (Schreber, 1777)) and muskrat (Ondatra zibethicus (L., 1766)) fur return time series from the Hudson's Bay Company in Canada have made a significant contribution to the study of predator-prey interactions. Mink prey species richness is greater in the southeastern part of Canada (C.J. Shier and M.S. Boyce), (2) and previous autocorrelation analyses of the spatiotemporal dynamics of the mink and muskrat fur return data have shown that the coupling between the two species is strongest in the northwestern part of Canada (Erb et al. 2001; Haydon et al. 2001; Viljugrein et al. 2001). A thorough evaluation of the geographic variability in four phases of mink-muskrat phase plots from the Hudson's Bay Company fur returns will be published elsewhere (Holmengen et al. 2009).

Cycle length and phase portrait characteristics are easily obtained probes of population dynamics. We here relate cycle lengths to other probes of population interactions. There are two major objectives of this study. Firstly, we hypothesized that cycle amplitude will increase with cycle length for both species, because populations that reach very low numbers would need more time to reach the cycle maximum than populations that have higher minimum abundances (presupposing that the low minimum abundance would not be compensated by, e.g., higher growth rates). We should be able to find an optimum time lag between the predator and the prey cycles that corresponds to the tightest coupling between the two species. The time lag and the rotations of the trajectories in the phase portraits should also depend on the cycle lengths of the species, since it is the relationship between the two species that determine the strength of the interaction. Secondly, we examine if the Lotka-Volterra model, the Rosenzweig-MacArthur model, or the more detailed model by Hanski et al. (1991) is capable of predicting the observed relationships among the species characteristics in the observed mink-muskrat data. One possible effect of climate changes and other human disturbances is a damping of the variation in population size of species, because the climate zones may be shifted northwards (Williams et al. 2007), and it is thus desirable to find the factors that cause damping. If simple models are capable of capturing the main trends in the relationships between predator and prey, they could be a useful tool in predicting future development.

Materials and methods

Test data

The need of coupled time series of predator-prey systems has led researchers to study simultaneous harvest data. The records of the Hudson's Bay Company in Manitoba includes long time series of fur return data for many predatory and some prey species. For the analyses performed here, fur return data of mink and muskrat from 75 different stations across Canada for the time period spanning 1925-1949 were used (25 years, one observation per year). These data have been shown to reflect variations in relative abundance of mink and muskrat, and not just information about the trapping efforts (Chitty and Chitty 1941, see also Viljugrein et al. 2001). Mink is a predator of the muskrat (Hamilton 1936; Errington 1943; O'Neil 1949), and throughout Canada, both species are widely distributed. In this study, we re-examine the Hudson's Bay Company fur return data. As the analyses undertaken here presuppose cyclic behavior of the populations, time series from two fur posts were omitted because of their lack of cyclicity.

The Hudson's Bay Company data from different stations are numerically very different (range of maximum fur return numbers between stations--mink: 142--3 157 individuals; muskrat: 307--117 483 individuals), and normally such time series should be log-transformed and standardized, as comparing times series from different areas is otherwise difficult. However, in part of our analyses, one major point is to examine the amplitude in different areas; thus, for this analysis, time series were not standardized, as valuable information would be lost in this process. The time lag between prey and predator is defined as the mean difference between one predator peak and the previous prey peak, a definition which results in the lag always being positive. For those time series that by this definition yielded a time lag higher than 3 years, a subjective evaluation of the time series was considered necessary. In the few situations where the mink populations had peaks close to, and before, the muskrat populations, the populations were considered to have negative …